the ethics of idiocy in 3 idiots

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    The ethics of Idiocy

    By admin | Thursday, January 28th, 2010

    It was quite refreshing to see how excellence was given priority over success in 3 Idiots. Until now we

    have been seeing a good number of movies about morality and success, of which the most recent

    example was Rocket Singh. In the period of recovery from economic recession, the film adds a necessary

    caveat on how to do business. The film moved beyond the dichotomy ofgood businessmen and bad

    businessmen by shifting the focus from the actors to the systems. It brought ethics into the core of

    economics in a powerful way.

    However going back to the issue of excellence and success, and without challenging the core idea that

    excellence should precede success, I was wondering what would have happened if we could change the

    order of the idiots . Put Aamir Khan s character in Sharman Joshi s shoes without changing their class

    background. In other words, what is the role of material contexts in defining what success and excellence

    could mean? What would be the ways to achieve them? Moreover, where would the morality and ethics

    of success figure in the discourses of class backgrounds and how?And this is where I feel like making a preposterous statement that although I loved watching 3 Idiots for

    its great entertainment value and for a meaningful message for discarding not only rote learning but also

    for chasing up genuine interests, I am not sure if the movie depicted poverty in its varied aspects. I am

    not arguing for political correctness in the depiction; I am arguing for the sensitivity towards it. Why was it

    necessary to depict the scenes of Aamir and Madhavan s visit to Joshi s house in black n white

    background in the backdrop of laughter-evoking musical piece? The whole scene of that encounter

    between a superfluous rich-background (Aamir) and a middle class guy (Madhavan) on the one hand and

    Joshi s gloomed house with plasters peeling off the walls evoked laughter than anything else. It

    represented the mimicry of poverty. Not even the irony was left, if at all poverty has got irony!There would be many movies one could possibly think of to juxtapose this sort of representation, but I am

    here reminded of a Sai Paranjape s movie called Disha. Made in the 1980s (most probably 1984) the

    movie has multiple thematic repertoire. While one could read urban-rural connectivity in that others could

    possibly turn to women issues. The thing which I liked the most in that movie was the variegated

    trajectories of poverty, which do not burden the viewers with their acuteness but neither caricature the

    differential response generation. Om Puri is the madman of the village who out of frustration of being poor

    (and lack of water in the village) had been digging a well for almost sixteen years. His sense of

    impoverishment made him enterprising because at last he succeeded in getting water. The characters of

    Raghubir Yadav and Nana Patekar deal with their worlds by migrating to Bombay. However they again

    followed different trajectories while Yadav who was keen to migrate chose to come back once water

    arrived in the village (his heart lay in the rurality?) Patekar, who was coerced by his immediate needs to

    migrate, decided to stay there because his wife, again because of poverty, was forced to work in thelocal bidifactory and ended up in having liaisons with the manager there. Every character was, so to say,

    poor; they shared the same material conditions, but every character showed distinct traits in dealing with

    their immediate conditions.This is the turf where 3 idiots failed to score a point the universalisation of the message of excellence

    over success was too monochromatic. To be fair, the narrative did try to complicate this by making Aamir

    s childhood a surrogate to richness a domestic help in a rich family. Also, he left the college empty

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    handed without that affluence and without the worldly tag of being the topper of the prestigious college.

    Yet, in no way it convinces, at least me, why a character like Joshi s should not aspire to just succeed.

    More importantly, and ironically the social constrictions and differential economic backgrounds were

    almost flattened. The chest-hair ridden belan of Joshi s mother will at best be remembered as a good joke

    in the movie in the same way as the other guy will be for always putting a price-tag to objects that also

    represented human emotions.